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The Water Crisis Hitting Cities That Were Supposed to Be Safe

2026-04-02| 2 min read| EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk
Story Focus

Cape Town nearly ran out of water in 2018. Now cities like Madrid, Rome, and Los Angeles face similar risk. Here is the specific hydrology behind urban water insecurity and what cities are doing.

Cape Town nearly ran out of water in 2018. Now cities like Madrid, Rome, and Los Angeles face similar risk. Here is the specific hydrology behind urban water insecurity and what cities are doing.

Key points
  • Cape Town nearly ran out of water in 2018.
  • The 'Day Zero' crisis that Cape Town narrowly avoided in 2018 — when the city's reservoirs fell to 13.
  • Madrid's water supply from the Guadarrama River system has been under increasing stress from declining snowpack in the Sierra Nevada, which serves as the seasonal reservoir that sustains river flow through summer.
Timeline
2026-04-02: The 'Day Zero' crisis that Cape Town narrowly avoided in 2018 — when the city's reservoirs fell to 13.
Current context: Madrid's water supply from the Guadarrama River system has been under increasing stress from declining snowpack in the Sierra Nevada, which serves as the seasonal reservoir that sustains river flow through summer.
What to watch: For the global picture: water stress affects approximately 40 percent of the world's population, and the number of major cities facing acute water security challenges is growing faster than the infrastructure investment...
Why it matters

Cape Town nearly ran out of water in 2018.

The 'Day Zero' crisis that Cape Town narrowly avoided in 2018 — when the city's reservoirs fell to 13.5 percent capacity and authorities prepared to shut off tap water to homes — demonstrated that a major city in a middle-income country could face complete urban water system failure within a modern political lifetime. The specific combination that produced Cape Town's crisis — a three-year drought in the Western Cape, population growth exceeding planning assumptions, inadequate investment in water system resilience, and consumer behaviour that adapted slowly to the severity of the risk — is visible in varying degrees in multiple other cities.

Madrid's water supply from the Guadarrama River system has been under increasing stress from declining snowpack in the Sierra Nevada, which serves as the seasonal reservoir that sustains river flow through summer. Climate projections for the Iberian Peninsula consistently show continued precipitation decline and increased evapotranspiration, reducing the renewable freshwater available to a city of 3.4 million. Madrid's water authorities have invested in water recycling and aquifer recharge programmes, but the trend of declining natural freshwater availability continues regardless.

Rome's iconic drinking fountains — the *nasoni* or 'little noses' that have supplied Romans with free drinking water for decades — were turned off during an extended drought in 2022, a symbolic and practical demonstration of the stress on central Italy's water supply. The Tiber basin's recharged groundwater, which supplies much of Rome's water, has been declining as rainfall patterns shift and extraction continues.

Los Angeles faces a different structural challenge: 80 percent of its water is imported through aqueducts from the Sierra Nevada snowpack (declining with climate change), the Colorado River (whose allocation to Southern California is under review as the river's flow has declined), and northern California (whose allocation is politically contested). LA's water managers have invested heavily in local groundwater cleanup, water recycling for toilet flushing and irrigation, and demand reduction — demonstrating that supply-side investment is insufficient without demand management.

For the global picture: water stress affects approximately 40 percent of the world's population, and the number of major cities facing acute water security challenges is growing faster than the infrastructure investment addressing it.

#water#crisis#cities#drought#climate#shortage

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